|
|
Books > Humanities > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945
 |
Ski
(Hardcover)
A. L Sutton
|
R700
Discovery Miles 7 000
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
|
|
A unique on-the-ground account of a country shattered
Iraqi playwright Issam Jameel returned to Iraq after a 12-year
exile. Giving up the relative safety of Jordan, he made a perilous
journey to Baghdad for a reunion. Unfortunately, the reason for his
trip was to grieve for his nephew, recently killed by American
forces while guarding an Iraq parliament member from insurgents.
Jameel also mourns the loss of a formerly secular civil society
replaced by vehement sectarianism, intolerance, and ignorance.
Basic human needs like food, water, and power have become an
endless daily struggle amidst the shards of infrastructure. Routine
tasks, such as selling a house or getting a job are fraught with
peril as old scores continue to be settled on religious, ethnic,
and political fronts. Everywhere he turns, people are desperate to
leave, but fear for the worst. After escaping this madness, he
recorded his eyewitness report, desperate to provide an honest and
impartial tale of an epic tragedy which has killed more than
100,000 people and displaced many more.
Today, the US government gambles with Iraq's stability by turning
a blind eye to Al-Maliki's internal policy, especially after
Wikileaks revealed his complicity in death squads. We are
jeopardizing the hard-won political gains that the US achieved by
neutralizing the Sunnis of Iraq when it converted them from
fighters and boycotters to voters. The US administration fails to
show much real concern for the future of democracy in Iraq except
perhaps for its anxiety about Obama's promises of military
withdrawal.
Critics Praise "Iraq Through A Bullet Hole"
"Issam Jameel's "Iraq Through A Bullet Hole" is evocative in the
best sense of the word. A native Iraqi, he describes with measured
sadness and authenticity the dismemberment of his country by a
senseless war. His perspective on events there-both personal and
general-will not be found in reporting done by the Western press.
His tale reminds us that the things that matter most-family,
friends, and faith can and will endure even the most severe trials.
I highly recommend this book for its relevance and
timelessness."
--Cristobal Krusen, Author and Filmmaker
"Iraq has been a focus for our attention for years now, since our
armed forces went looking for nonexistent weapons of mass
destruction there. The media have presented a picture-but how real
is it? What is life really like in that unfortunate country? Find
out by reading this book."
--Robert Rich, PhD, Author of "Cancer: A Personal Challenge"
"Going home is such a trivial thing to so many people in the
world. This story is the revealing statement of one man that went
home to find it lost in such a strife-filled region, considered by
historians as the origin of modern civilization. For those who do
know how difficult his journey was, they will relate to Issam's
message which is one of perseverance, shared hope and a common
faith in mankind that in the end, all could eventually be well. If
only men would let it..."
--Bill Evans, civilian contractor in Iraq
More info at www.IraqThruABulletHole.com
Book #5 in the Reflections of History Series from Modern History
Press www.ModernHistoryPress.com
BIO000000 Biography & Autobiography: General
HIS027170 History: Military - Iraq War (2003-)
HIS026000 History: Middle East - General
Since the September 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon, the United States has been at war with Al-Qaida. Over the
past 10 years, counterterrorism efforts have disrupted its main
training facilities and eliminated much of the core leadership
structure, including the mastermind Usama Bin Ladin. Despite this,
Al-Qaida has proved resilient. While the core leadership has been
compromised, regional Al-Qaida offshoots and affiliated Islamist
terrorist groups have formed, developed, and become prominent in
their own right. To aid in examining and explaining Al-Qaida's
trajectory, the Minerva Initiative at Marine Corps University
hosted a conference in the spring of 2011, just days before Bin
Ladin's demise. The panels at this conference addressed diverse
issues such as Al-Qaida's overarching strategy; the degree of
control that central Al-Qaida leadership maintains over regional
franchises; and the strategies, tactics, successes, and failures in
each theater of operation. The resulting papers in Al-Qaida after
Ten Years of War contribute to the ongoing and ever-evolving net
assessment of Al-Qaida and its future prospects, and they help
inform the crafting of a war termination phase with Al-Qaida.
Represents one of the earliest efforts to chronicle Marine Corps
operations in Iraq between 2004-2005. Commissioned and written
while U.S. forces were still engaged in combat operations in Iraq.
Contains maps to help orientate and familiarize readers to Iraq,
al-Anbar Province, and the two battles for Fallujah. Contains
photographs of commanders, combat operations, equipment, and
civil-military operations.
"Damn you Rolly, you succeeded in taking me back to Vinh Long and
Advisory Team 68, after a more than 40 year absence. I thank you
for honoring all who served, but especially patriots like Bob Olson
and Walt Gutowski, Army guys... that I knew well. They were great
men whose spirit and professionalism you captured well. I highly
recommend the book..." Mike Paluda, Michigan COLONEL, USA, RET.
"Rolly Kidder has delivered a brilliant chronicle of the Vietnam
conflict with which many may not be familiar. Forty years later, he
revisits Vietnam and tracks down the families of three men who had
been killed... Kidder's recounting of his visits with the families
of the three servicemen is a poignant reminder of the continuing
grief and pride extant amongst many and is a fitting memorial to
the Army and Riverine heroes and an honor to those who mourn them."
Captain, M.B. Connolly, USN (retired) COMMANDER, RIVER ASSAULT
DIVISION 132 RIVER ASSAULT SQUADRON 13, 1969-70
 |
Poppa-San
(Hardcover)
Thomas Terry
|
R734
R643
Discovery Miles 6 430
Save R91 (12%)
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
|
|
The Korean War occupies a unique place in American history and
foreign policy. Because it followed closely after World War II and
ushered in a new era of military action as the first hot conflict
of the cold war, the Korean War was marketed as an entirely new
kind of military campaign. But how were the war-weary American
people convinced that the limited objectives of the Korean War were
of paramount importance to the nation?
In this ground-breaking book, Steven Casey deftly analyzes the
Truman and Eisenhower administrations' determined efforts to shape
public discourse about the war, influence media coverage of the
conflict, and gain political support for their overall approach to
waging the Cold War, while also trying to avoid inciting a hysteria
that would make it difficult to localize the conflict. The first
in-depth study of Truman's and Eisenhower's efforts to garner and
sustain support for the war, Selling the Korean War weaves a lucid
tale of the interactions between the president and government
officials, journalists, and public opinion that ultimately produced
the twentieth century concept of limited war.
It has been popularly thought that the public is instinctively
hostile towards any war fought for less than total victory, but
Casey shows that limited wars place major constraints on what the
government can say and do. He also demonstrates how the Truman
administration skillfully rededicated and redefined the war as it
dragged on with mounting casualties. Using a rich array of
previously untapped archival resources--including official
government documents, and the papers of leading congressmen,
newspaper editors, and war correspondents--Casey's work promises to
bethe definitive word on the relationship between presidents and
public opinion during America's "forgotten war."
This oral history of the air war in Vietnam includes the stories of
more than thirty pilots who all had one thing in common-after
returning from Southeast Asia and separating from the service, they
were hired as pilots by Western Airlines. As the chapters begin,
Bruce Cowee tells his story and introduces us to each pilot. The
interesting theme is that all of these men served in Southeast Asia
and in most cases never knew each other until they came home and
went to work for Western Airlines. Each of the pilots featured in
this book is the real thing, and in an age of so many "Wannabees,"
it is reassuring to know that each of them was a pilot for Western
Airlines and someone who Bruce worked with or knew professionally.
The stories span a 9 year period, 1964 - 1973, and cover every
aspect of the Air War in Southeast Asia. These 33 men represent
only a small fraction of the Vietnam veterans hired as pilots by
Western Airlines, but this book pays tribute to all of them.
In January 1969, one of the most promising young lieutenant colonels the U.S. Army had ever seen touched down in Vietnam for his second tour of duty, which would turn out to be his most daring and legendary. David H. Hackworth had just completed the writing of a tactical handbook for the Pentagon, and now he had been ordered to put his counterguerilla-fighting theories into action. He was given the morale-drained 4/39th -- a battalion of poorly led draftees suffering the Army's highest casualty rate and considered its worst fighting battalion. Hackworth's hard-nosed, inventive and inspired leadership quickly turned the 4/39th into Vietnam's valiant and ferocious Hardcore Recondos. Drawing on interviews with soldiers from the Hardcore Battalion conducted over the past decade by his partner and coauthor, Eilhys England, Hackworth takes readers along on their sniper missions, ambush actions, helicopter strikes and inside the quagmire of command politics. With Steel My Soldiers' Hearts, Hackworth places the brotherhood of the 4/39th into the pantheon of our nation's most heroic warriors.
Explores how writers, filmmakers and artists have attempted to
reckon with the legacy of a devastating war The Iran-Iraq War was
the longest conventional war of the 20th century. The memory of it
may have faded in the wake of more recent wars in the region, but
the harrowing facts remain: over one million soldiers and civilians
dead, millions more permanently displaced and disabled, and an
entire generation marked by prosthetic implants and teenage
martyrdom. These same facts have been instrumentalized by agendas
both foreign and domestic, but also aestheticized, defamiliarized,
readdressed and reconciled by artists, writers, and filmmakers
across an array of identities: linguistic (Arabic, Persian,
Kurdish), religious (Shiite, Sunni, atheist), and political
(Iranian, Iraqi, internationalist). Official discourses have
unsurprisingly tried to dominate the process of production and
distribution of war narratives. In doing so, they have ignored and
silenced other voices. Centering on novels, films, memoirs, and
poster art that gave aesthetic expression to the Iran-Iraq War, the
essays gathered in this volume present multiple perspectives on the
war's most complex and underrepresented narratives. These scholars
do not naively claim to represent an authenticity lacking in
official discourses of the war, but rather, they call into question
the notion of authenticity itself. Finding, deciding upon, and
creating a language that can convey any sort of truth at
all-collective, national, or private-is the major preoccupation of
the texts and critiques in this diverse collection.
When Jerry Elmer turned eighteen at the height of the Vietnam War,
he publicly refused to register for the draft, a felony then and
now. Later he burglarized the offices of fourteen draft boards in
three cities, destroying the files of men eligible to be drafted.
After working almost twenty years in the peace movement, he
attended law school, where he was the only convicted felon in
Harvard's class of 1990.
This book is a blend of personal memoir, contemporary history,
and astute political analysis. Elmer draws on a variety of sources,
including never-before-released FBI files, and argues passionately
for the practice of nonviolence. He describes the range of actions
he took--from draft card burning to organizing draft board raids
with Father Phil Berrigan; from vigils on the Capitol steps inside
"tiger cages" used to torture Vietnamese political prisoners to
jail time for protesting nuclear power plants; from a tour of the
killing fields of Cambodia to meetings with Corazon Aquino in the
Philippines.
A Vietnamese-language edition of "Felon for Peace" has also been
published.
|
You may like...
Dashboards for Excel
Jordan Goldmeier, Purnachandra Duggirala
Paperback
R2,539
Discovery Miles 25 390
|